Captain Marvel v7 #2 (2012) art by Dexter Soy

seen from Malaysia
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
Captain Marvel v7 #2 (2012) art by Dexter Soy
Looking at portraits of famous historical aviators in "Soarin' Over California" and wondering if Helen Cobb, Jerry Quimby, or the rest of the Banshee Squadron would be included. Then I remembered that they are fictional. Dork.
I sense my Jerri Quimby/Carol Danvers infatuation coming back with a vengeance.
My optimysticals package landed! And super timing, seeing as this was the last day I was going to be at school. (And before anyone bothers me, that is the address of my school's post office, so I'm not worried about posting it.)
The earrings were a surprise free gift from the sale event when I ordered them and are super cute! Little blue lightning bolts! And then was the Banshee Squadron tag which is awesome. The text is a wee bit hard to read, but it's already gotten pride of place on my neck and deservedly so.
But then there's the item that takes pride of place, my beautiful new Winter Soldier hoodie. (And yes, that is me wearing it and squshing my SHIELD pillow.) It just the right type of oversized, the sleeves hitting just below my wrists and the torso is super long and big for comfy layering. I am going to live in this once fall and winter come because it's super warm and snuggly and awesome.
Captain Marvel 02 (2013)
This is an authentic well-preserved 1943 WAAC enlisted uniform, from the United States Army Air Force Technical Training Command. (That's Women's Army Auxiliary Corps.) As was standard for enlisted soldiers, there is no name. It does include the owner's last initial and last 4 digits of her ID number. The pieces do have a number of holes or worn spots, but it's overall in excellent condition for being seventy years old. And, wonder of wonders, it fits. It's a size 16 by the label. In modern fashion I'm a 4-6 and in sewing patterns I'm a 12. [Click through for captions and details.]
The shoes are just black oxfords I had on hand. I believe tan was the color of choice; I'll keep my eyes out. I don't think I even need 1940's style foundation garments, given the weight of the jacket. The blouse is just slightly too tight in the collar and short in the sleeve, which is a shame because the detailing is exquisite. The bodice panels are gathered into the shoulder seams and there are waist darts.
I was considering replacing the lapel pins with SSR pins, though these insignia don't go on with clutch pins and thus swapping them out might damage the jacket. At any rate, have a couple photos of "Steph" picking up her shield in Howard's workshop and then getting shot at by Peggy.
The last photo shows me holding my granddad's service photo. I miss him. He never once talked about being in the military (Army Corps of Engineers) and I didn't find out until we pulled wedding photos for Granny's memorial service. I hope he wouldn't mind me wearing this.
I'm also tagging this "Carol Corps" and "Banshee Squadron" because this is their uniform, down to the year and the branch of service. I hope they wouldn't mind me wearing this, and I hope the original owner would be glad to see it worn instead of disintegrating on a shelf.
Though I'm sad to send my "My sexual preference is not you" bottle opener back to my spare set of keys, I'm waaay more badass now. Between Optimystical's Banshee Squadron dog tag and 42nd Seal's Coulson keychain, I'm ready for anything!